Japanese reporter shot dead in Syria

Japanese reporter shot dead in Syria

According to DCMF, the death toll of citizen journalists and reporters killed in Syria now stands at 58.

Tue, 21/08/2012

Mika Yamamoto on NHK news channel. AFP image

A veteran Japanese war reporter died after she was shot in the neck when coming under fire from up to 15 apparently pro-government troops in Syria's second city, a colleague said on Tuesday.

Mika Yamamoto was covering the anti-regime movement in Aleppo, which has borne the brunt of the conflict since fighting erupted there last month, her long-time colleague Kazutaka Sato told Japanese broadcasters.

The death of the 45-year-old takes to four the number of foreign journalists who have lost their lives in the country since the uprising began against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad in March 2011.

Yamamoto is the first of them to die in Aleppo, with the other three, two French men and an American woman were killed in Homs. Her death was confirmed by Japan's foreign ministry.

Three other journalists were also reportedly missing on Tuesday, two of them from a US-funded Arabic language broadcaster. It was not clear if the incidents were connected.

Sato, a colleague from the small but respected Japan Press, said he and Yamamoto had been with anti-regime forces when they were shot at on Monday by what appeared to be government soldiers.

"We saw a group of 10 to 15 troops ahead on the right, who were walking in double file," he told national broadcaster NHK.

"When they started shooting, I dashed towards my left, where I saw a Free Syrian Army soldier."

Sato, who also worked with Yamamoto in Iraq, told NTV: "The one at the front (of the group of troops) was wearing a helmet and I immediately thought they were government troops.

"I think I told her to run. At that moment, they started shooting.

"We all ran and scattered. After that, I couldn't see Yamamoto and was told to go to hospital. I found Yamamoto's body there."

Sato was told by a hospital official that Yamamoto was already dead when she arrived, NHK said. The TBS network cited Sato as saying she had been shot in the neck.

“A wonderful reporter and daughter”

Yamamoto was a known face on Japanese television, who came to prominence after surviving air raids on the Palestine Hotel in Baghdad in 2003, in which two journalists from Reuters and a Spanish broadcaster were killed.

The dead woman's father, retired journalist Koji Yamamoto, said reports of her death were "too much to bear".

"She was always talking about tragic people who were caught in conflicts, human lives and world peace. She was more than I was... she is a wonderful reporter and daughter," he told Jiji Press.

Abu Raashid, commander of the Liwa Asifat al Shamal, one of the groups that make up the opposition Free Syrian Army, told an AFP reporter near Aleppo the dead journalist had been "targeted by regime forces".

He said his men had transported the body to nearby Turkey through the Bab al-Salam crossing.

"If the international community doesn't move to help the Syrian people, they have to react to the spilling of their citizens' blood on Syrian territory," he said.

"We want a sincere position from the international community, a real position, not just words."

A total of 23,000 people have been killed in Syria since March last year, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a non-governmental organisation.

The death toll of reporters and citizen journalists killed in Syria since the beginning of the regime's campaign to flush out anti-government protests has jumped to 58, according to the Doha Centre for Media Freedom.

Andrew Lwanga was beaten by a police official while covering a youth demonstration. He has suffered horrific injuries, and still awaits justice in his case, despite evidence seemingly proving his side of the story.